House hacking is the most practical way I know to get into Central Iowa real estate without a huge pile of cash — and a value-priced small town like Slater can quietly work for it. The idea is straightforward: buy a duplex (or a home with rentable space), live in one unit, and let the rent from the other side cover most or all of your mortgage. Here's how it actually works here, and what to watch.
You buy a small multi-unit property as an owner-occupant, move into one unit, and rent the others. Because you live there, you qualify for owner-occupant financing — which is far cheaper to get into than an investor loan. Your tenants' rent offsets your housing payment, so you're building equity and cutting your own cost of living at the same time.
Slater's appeal for a first house hack is the lower entry price. Homes here generally cost less than comparable properties in Ankeny or Ames, so you need less cash to get in the door. Slater sits between Ames (Iowa State) and the Des Moines job corridor, which supports rental interest from two directions. Be honest with yourself about the trade-off, though: a small town has a smaller renter pool and fewer true duplexes than a big suburb, so the specific property has to pencil.
With an FHA loan on an owner-occupied 2–4 unit property, your down payment can be as low as 3.5%. On a $250,000 duplex, that's roughly $8,750 down instead of the 20%+ an investor would need. You live in one side; the other side's rent goes toward your payment. In the right deal, that rent covers a large share of the mortgage — which is exactly what makes house hacking so powerful for a first purchase.
These are illustrative numbers, not a guarantee. Every deal has to pencil on its own — rents, condition, and the payment all matter, and in a thin small-town market the right property may take patience to find.
I'll be straight with you: house hacking is real work, not passive income. You're a live-in landlord, which means tenant screening, maintenance, and the occasional inconvenient phone call. In Slater specifically, true duplexes are scarce — a single-family home with a rentable basement or extra bedrooms is often the more realistic play, and condition matters because the housing stock spans several eras. The numbers have to clear on their own merit, and I never promise a return. Talk to a local lender early about FHA terms and owner-occupancy requirements, and make sure the property meets FHA condition standards.
Before you fall in love with a property, run the math. Take the House Hack Score quiz to see if you're a fit, use the free calculators to pressure-test a deal, and read my how much house can you afford in Slater guide. Want to look at real Slater and Ballard-area properties? Reach out and I'll help you analyze one before you ever write an offer.
If you've been waiting for a reasonable way into Central Iowa real estate, house hacking in a value-priced town like Slater with an FHA loan is one of the most accessible paths there is. Do the work, run the numbers honestly, and it can be the smartest first move you make.
Jackson Krile is a residential and investment REALTOR® on the Flanders Team at RE/MAX Real Estate Center and the creator of House Hack Jack. This is educational information, not financial or lending advice — consult a licensed lender for your situation. Reach out to run the numbers on a real Slater deal.
Let's talk through your specific situation — no pressure.